The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Jacob’s Ladder
Genesis 28:10–17 — Jacob’s Ladder. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
10Meanwhile Jacob left Beersheba and set out for Haran.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·‘ă·qōḇ way·yê·ṣê mib·bə·’êr šā·ḇa‘ way·yê·leḵ ḥā·rā·nāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Jacob went out from Beersheba and walked toward Haran.
Where the English smooths the original
From Abraham to Jacob is a great descent.Maclaren's frank verdict on the man God meets here — the unit's interpretive starting point.
Jacob went out from Beer-sheba — Unattended and alone, God, in his wise providence, so ordering it, for the greater illustration of his care over, and kindness toward him.
His departure from his father's house was an ignominious flight; and for fear of being pursued or waylaid by his vindictive brother, he did not take the common road, but went by lonely and unfrequented paths, which increased the length and dangers of the journey.
11On reaching a certain place, he spent the night there because the sun had set. And taking one of the stones from that place, he put it under his head and lay down to sleep.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yip̄·ga‘ bam·mā·qō·wm way·yā·len šām kî- haš·še·meš ḇā way·yiq·qaḥ mê·’aḇ·nê ham·mā·qō·wm way·yā·śem mə·ra·’ă·šō·ṯāw way·yiš·kaḇ ha·hū bam·mā·qō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he lighted upon the place and spent the night there, because the sun had set; and he took one of the stones of the place and put [it] at his head-place, and lay down in that place.
Where the English smooths the original
The words "he hit (lighted) upon the place," indicate the apparently accidental, yet really divinely appointed choice of this place for his night-quarters; and the definite article points it out as having become well known through the revelation of God that ensued.
The Divine purpose of the revelation made to Jacob is contrasted in this word with the fortuitousness of Jacob’s action.On the single word pâgaʻ, "lighted upon" — chance to the man, design to God.
The stones for his pillows, and the heavens for his canopy! Yet his comfort in the divine blessing, and his confidence in the divine protection, made him easy, even when he lay thus exposed
12And Jacob had a dream about a ladder that rested on the earth with its top reaching up to heaven, and God’s angels were going up and down the ladder.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·ḥă·lōm wə·hin·nêh sul·lām muṣ·ṣāḇ ’ar·ṣāh wə·rō·šōw mag·gî·a‘ haš·šā·mā·yə·māh wə·hin·nêh ’ĕ·lō·hîm mal·’ă·ḵê ‘ō·lîm wə·yō·rə·ḏîm bōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he dreamed, and behold, a stairway set on the earth, and its top reaching the heavens; and behold, angels of God going up and going down on it.
Where the English smooths the original
By “a ladder,” LXX κλίμαξ , Lat. scala , we must not understand a house ladder, with uprights and rung of wood; but, rather, a stairway, or ascent by successive terraces.On the hapax sullām — the English "ladder" is a guess at a word that occurs only here.
And these angels do not appear idle, or standing still, but always in motion, either ascending to God to receive his commands, or descending to earth for the execution of them.
It tells him that heaven and earth are united, and that there is a way from one to the other. Upon these stairs “messengers of Elohim are ascending and descending,” carrying up to God men’s prayers, and the tale of their wants and sorrows, of their faith and hope and trust; and bringing down to them help and comfort and blessing.
Christ is the ladder by which God and man are joined together, and by whom the angels minister to us: all graces are given to us by him, and we ascend to heaven by him.The Reformers' christological reading, set beside Poole's providential one — both held, neither erased.
13And there at the top the LORD was standing and saying, “I am the LORD, the God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac. I will give you and your descendants the land on which you now lie.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hin·nêh ‘ā·lāw Yah·weh niṣ·ṣāḇ way·yō·mar ’ă·nî Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê ’ā·ḇî·ḵā ’aḇ·rā·hām wê·lō·hê yiṣ·ḥāq ’et·tə·nen·nāh ū·lə·zar·‘e·ḵā hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer ’at·tāh šō·ḵêḇ ‘ā·le·hā lə·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And behold, the LORD standing over it / beside him, and saying, "I am the LORD, the God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac; the land on which you are lying, to you I will give it and to your seed."
Where the English smooths the original
Jacob is lying down: Jehovah is standing by him. Jacob is made to realize the ever-protecting Presence, at his side, or watching over him.Arguing the preposition ʻālāyw means "beside him," not "above it" — a genuine translational fork.
the announcement of His name, together with a renewal of the covenant, and an assurance of personal protection, produced at once the most solemnizing and inspiriting effect on his mind.
He felt the force of this promise only by faith: for all his life he was a stranger in this land.On the land-grant — given by word, possessed only by faith (cf. Hebrews 11:9).
God's time to visit his people with his comforts, is, when they are most destitute of other comforts, and other comforters.Henry on the timing of the theophany — the LORD speaks the covenant over a man who has fled with nothing but a stone for a pillow.
14Your descendants will be like the dust of the earth, and you will spread out to the west and east and north and south. All the families of the earth will be blessed through you and your offspring.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
zar·‘ă·ḵā wə·hā·yāh ka·‘ă·p̄ar hā·’ā·reṣ ū·p̄ā·raṣ·tā yām·māh wā·qê·ḏə·māh wə·ṣā·p̄ō·nāh wā·neḡ·bāh kāl- miš·pə·ḥōṯ hā·’ă·ḏā·māh wə·niḇ·ră·ḵū ḇə·ḵā ū·ḇə·zar·‘e·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And your seed will be like the dust of the earth, and you will break forth to the west and to the east and to the north and to the south; and in you and in your seed all the families of the ground will be blessed.
Where the English smooths the original
in that eminent and principal seed that should spring from him, the Messiah, in whom some of all nations should, as they have been, be blessed with all spiritual blessings, as redemption, peace, pardon, justification, adoption, and eternal life
All that are blessed, whatever family they are of, are blessed in Christ, and none of any family are excluded from blessedness in him, but those that exclude themselves.
In its ultimate significance this points to the world-wide universality of the kingdom of Christ (Murphy)
He renews the promise of the land, of the seed, and of the blessing in that seed for the whole race of man. Westward, eastward, northward, and southward are they to break forth. This expression points to the world-wide universality of the kingdom of the seed of AbrahamBarnes reads the fourfold breaking-forth not as mere territory but as the universal reach of the promised seed — a reading that bursts the bounds of Canaan toward all nations.
15Look, I am with you, and I will watch over you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this land. For I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hin·nêh ’ā·nō·ḵî ‘im·māḵ ū·šə·mar·tî·ḵā bə·ḵōl ’ă·šer- tê·lêḵ wa·hă·ši·ḇō·ṯî·ḵā ’el- haz·zōṯ hā·’ă·ḏā·māh kî lō ’e·‘ĕ·zā·ḇə·ḵā ‘aḏ ’ă·šer ’im- ‘ā·śî·ṯî ’êṯ ’ă·šer- dib·bar·tî lāḵ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And behold, I [am] with you, and I will keep you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this ground; for I will not leave you until I have done what I have spoken to you.
Where the English smooths the original
Behold, I am with thee — Wherever we are, we are safe, if we have God’s favourable presence with us. He knew not, but God foresaw, what hardships he would meet with in his uncle’s service, and therefore promiseth to preserve him in all places.
Nor ever after; for so the word until is frequently used, as 2 Samuel 6:23 Matthew 1:25 ; not so as to exclude the time following, but so as to include all the foregoing time, wherein the thing spoken of might be most suspected or fearedGuarding against the misreading that "until I have done" means God will then depart.
for I will not leave thee, - a promise afterwards repeated to Israel ( Deuteronomy 31:6, 8 ), to Joshua ( Genesis 1:5 ), to Solomon ( 1 Chronicles 28:20 ), to the poor and needy ( Isaiah 41:17 ), to Christians ( Hebrews 13:7 )The Pulpit Commentary itself traces the "I will not leave thee" formula through Joshua to Hebrews — note its own slip citing "Genesis 1:5" for Joshua 1:5, the very chain this unit flags.
16When Jacob woke up, he said, “Surely the LORD is in this place, and I was unaware of it.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·‘ă·qōḇ way·yî·qaṣ miš·šə·nā·ṯōw way·yō·mer ’ā·ḵên Yah·weh yêš haz·zeh bam·mā·qō·wm wə·’ā·nō·ḵî lō yā·ḏā·‘ə·tî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Jacob awoke from his sleep, and he said, "Surely the LORD is in this place, and I did not know [it]."
Where the English smooths the original
Jacob was not unaware of the omnipresence of the Deity: what astonished him was that Jehovah should thus reveal Himself far away from the shrines where He was worshipped.Correcting the careless reading that Jacob denied God's omnipresence — it was the locale, not the doctrine, that stunned him.
We sometimes meet with God there, where we little thought of meeting with him. He is there where we did not think he had been; is found there where we asked not for him.
Not that the omnipresence of God was unknown to him; but that Jehovah in His condescending mercy should be near to him even here, far away from his father's house and from the places consecrated to His worship-it was this which he did not know or imagine.
17And he was afraid and said, “How awesome is this place! This is none other than the house of God; this is the gate of heaven!”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yî·rā way·yō·mar mah- nō·w·rā haz·zeh ham·mā·qō·wm zeh ’ên kî ’im- bêṯ ’ĕ·lō·hîm wə·zeh ša·‘ar haš·šā·mā·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he was afraid and said, "How awesome is this place! This is nothing other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven!"
Where the English smooths the original
The manifestation of God must always inspire awe and dread, but not fear: for where He reveals Himself, there is “the gate of heaven”—the appointed entrance for prayer now, and for admission to the glorified life hereafter.
This adjective is rendered unsuitable by colloquial usage. The sense would be better given by “awesome” or “terrible.”On nôrāʼ — why "dreadful" now misleads the modern ear.
not as the suburbs of hell, but as the gate of heaven majestic and venerable, because of the glory of God that appeared in it, whose name is holy and reverend and because of the holy angels here present
How dreadful is this place, or venerable, both for the majesty of the Person present, and for the glorious manner of his discovery of himself! The house of God; the habitation of God and of his holy angels.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit opens on a man at his worst. Alexander Maclaren states it without flattery: From Abraham to Jacob is a great descent — "a crafty schemer, selfish, over-reaching," fleeing the brother he cheated. He goes out (wayyêṣê, v.10) from Beersheba unattended; Joseph Benson reads the loneliness as design — Unattended and alone, God, in his wise providence, so ordering it, for the greater illustration of his care — while Jamieson, Fausset & Brown see only the flight: His departure from his father's house was an ignominious flight. Then comes the Hebrew's quiet hinge. He does not arrive at the place; the verb is wayyip̄gaʻ, he struck / lighted upon it (v.11), and the noun carries the definite article — the place. Keil & Delitzsch catch both at once: the words "indicate the apparently accidental, yet really divinely appointed choice… and the definite article points it out as having become well known through the revelation of God that ensued." The Cambridge Bible sharpens it to a single word: "The Divine purpose of the revelation made to Jacob is contrasted in this word with the fortuitousness of Jacob's action." So the chapter's theology is set before the dream begins: the sleeper's chance is the Maker's appointment. With a rare-word stone (mərăʼăšōṯāw, v.11) at his head and, in Benson's phrase, the heavens for his canopy, the fugitive lies down on the ground that is about to be deeded to his nation.
The center of the unit is a single untranslatable noun. Sullām (v.12) occurs nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible, so no parallel can fix its shape. "Ladder" is the King James guess; the Cambridge Bible argues the word means "not a house ladder, with uprights and rung of wood; but, rather, a stairway, or ascent by successive terraces," and Maclaren independently sees "a broad stair or sloping ascent." Whatever its form, the verb is the point: its top is maggîaʻ, touching the heavens. Ellicott draws the lesson — It tells him that heaven and earth are united, and that there is a way from one to the other — peopled with "messengers of Elohim… carrying up to God men's prayers… and bringing down to them help and comfort and blessing." Matthew Poole insists on the traffic: these angels do not appear idle, or standing still, but always in motion. Here the readings divide honestly, and the division is ancient. The providential reading (Poole, Keil) sees the everyday commerce of heaven over a lonely man. The christological reading is just as old: the Geneva Study Bible's margin flatly states, Christ is the ladder by which God and man are joined together. The synthesizer keeps both, because the text itself only gives the stairway; the New Testament gives the name.
Then the symbol speaks. The name shifts from Elohim (v.12) to Yahweh (v.13), and the Pulpit Commentary reads the shift as deliberate: not "the general providence of the Deity," but "the special superintendence of the God of Abraham and of Isaac over his chosen people." Whether the LORD stands "above it" or, as the Cambridge Bible argues, "beside him" — Jacob is lying down: Jehovah is standing by him — the participle niṣṣāḇ marks a settled presence, not a flash. The covenant is handed down a third time: the land on which he is lying (the participle presses the promise onto the very ground touching his body), seed like the dust he sleeps in, and the breaking-forth (ūp̄āraṣtā, a flood-verb) to all four winds. The climax is the oldest promise of all — in you and in your seed all the families of the ground shall be blessed (v.14). Joseph Benson hears the gospel in it: All that are blessed, whatever family they are of, are blessed in Christ, and none of any family are excluded from blessedness in him, but those that exclude themselves. John Gill names the bearer: that eminent and principal seed that should spring from him, the Messiah. The singular collective zeraʻ is the thread the apostle Paul will later pull (Galatians 3:16).
The personal word follows the cosmic one. God's emphatic ʼānōḵî — I myself am with you — gathers four promises the Cambridge Bible counts off: presence, preservation, restoration, fulfilment. The keeping-verb (šāmar) is armed guardianship; the return-verb (wahăšiḇōṯîḵā) answers the going-out that opened the unit; and the last clause holds the great word ʻāzab: I will not forsake you until I have done what I have spoken. Matthew Poole guards it against misreading — the until does "not so as to exclude the time following, but so as to include all the foregoing time" — God does not depart when the promise is kept. Then Jacob wakes. His emphatic ʼānōḵî answers God's: Surely the LORD is in this place, and I did not know it (v.16). Ellicott rescues the line from caricature — Jacob was not unaware of the omnipresence of the Deity: what astonished him was that Jehovah should thus reveal Himself far away from the shrines where He was worshipped — and Benson turns it to comfort: We sometimes meet with God there, where we little thought of meeting with him. The waking is not joy but dread (v.17). Gill distinguishes it carefully — "not with a servile but filial fear" — and the place that struck him as fearsome (nôrāʼ, the same root as his fear) he names twice: house of God and gate of heaven. The stairway has a foot and a door, and Jacob is standing in it.
This paragraph is the tool's own reading under Sola Scriptura — fallible, ⚙-marked, offered to be tested, not believed. The hinge of the whole unit is the gap between two emphatic pronouns. In verse 15 God says ʼānōḵî ʻimmāḵ — "I-myself am with you" — the heavy, full first-person form, chosen for weight. In verse 16 Jacob answers with the same heavy pronoun: wəʼānōḵî lōʼ yādāʻtî — "and I-myself did not know it." The narrator has set God's I and Jacob's I face to face. That is the spiritual situation of the passage in one grammatical gesture: God has been present and committed ("I am with you") to a man who had no idea ("I did not know"). The reading this synthesizer offers is that Bethel is not first about a ladder or a vow but about a discovery that runs the wrong direction from what we expect — it is not that Jacob found God by climbing, but that God was already standing at the foot of the place where Jacob had carelessly lain down to sleep. The traffic on the stairway goes up before it goes down (v.12), but the initiative is entirely downward: the God at the top speaks, promises, keeps, and refuses to forsake a schemer who brought nothing to the encounter but exhaustion and a stone. The fear of verse 17 is the right response — but notice it is fear at grace, not at judgment: the place is "dreadful" precisely because it turned out to be the house of God and he had been sleeping on its doorstep. Weigh this against the verses; the named commentators above — Keil, Ellicott, the Cambridge Bible — are surer guides than the synthesizer, who only points at the two pronouns and asks you to hear them answer each other.
⚙ A fallible line, not a verse of Scripture: at Bethel the discovery runs downward — not that Jacob climbed to God, but that God was already standing at the foot of the stone he had carelessly chosen for a pillow.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The strongest intra-Hebrew verbal link in the unit. The word for what Jacob put at his head, mərăʼăšōṯāw (v.11), is genuinely rare — H4763 mᵉraʼăshâh occurs in only 8 verses in the whole Hebrew Bible. It surfaces again in the night-scene where David and Abishai creep into Saul's camp and find "his spear stuck in the ground at his head-place" (1 Samuel 26:7), and again at 26:11, 16 and 19:13, 16. The Verifier records the shared rare lexeme H4763 together with H7901 shâkab ("to lie down"). Because mᵉraʼăshâh is so scarce, the recurrence is a real verbal echo, not coincidence: both passages stage a sleeping man, defenceless, with everything turning on what happens at the place of his head — Jacob with heaven at his pillow, Saul with a spear.
Genesis 28:11 · 1 Samuel 26:7
basis: shared rare Strong's lexeme H4763 mᵉraʼăshâh (only 8 vv in the OT), plus H7901 shâkab (190 vv); the rarity of mᵉraʼăshâh warrants 'verbal' — the head-place word recurs across the sleeping-man scenes of Genesis 28 and 1 Samuel 26.
Jacob walks toward Haran (ḥārānāh, v.10); his grandfather Abraham had walked out of Haran at God's call (Genesis 12:4). The Verifier records the shared lexeme H2771 Chârân — a rare place-name, in only 11 verses total. The link is structural rather than a quotation: the same city frames the two journeys, but in mirror image. Abraham left Haran to enter the land of promise; Jacob leaves the land of promise to take refuge in Haran. The rare name binds the generations — and Genesis 29:4, where Jacob reaches Haran and meets the shepherds, completes the arc the Verifier also flags (H2771 + H3290 Yaʻăqôb).
Genesis 28:10 · Genesis 12:4 · Genesis 29:4
basis: shared rare Strong's lexeme H2771 Chârân (11 vv); the same place-name frames Abraham's exit from Haran (Gen 12:4) and Jacob's flight toward it — a mirror-structure, not a quotation, hence structural rather than verbal.
The vision shows malʼăḵê ʼĕlōhîm, "angels of God" (v.12), on the stairway as Jacob flees the land. The same unusual phrase returns at the far end of his exile: "Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God (malʼăḵê ʼĕlōhîm) met him" (Genesis 32:1), as he re-enters the land twenty years later. The Verifier records the shared lexeme H4397 mălʼâk ("messenger / angel," 197 vv) between the two verses. The Cambridge Bible already flags it — noting that "the angels of God" is "most rare" and pointing to Genesis 32:1. The word mălʼâk is common, so the badge is structural, not verbal; but the bracketing is deliberate: angelic escort opens the flight and angelic escort closes the return, framing the whole sojourn in Haran between two encampments of God's messengers — Bethel at the gate of heaven, Mahanaim ("two camps," Genesis 32:2) at the threshold home.
Genesis 28:12 · Genesis 32:1
basis: shared Strong's lexeme H4397 mălʼâk (197 vv) per the Verifier — a common word, so structural rather than verbal; the rare phrase 'angels of God' brackets Jacob's exile, meeting him as he leaves the land (Gen 28:12) and again as he returns (Gen 32:1, Mahanaim).
The promise spoken from the stairway's head — "the land on which you are lying, to you I will give it and to your seed" (v.13) — is the verbatim renewal of the grant first made to Abraham: "all the land which you see, to you I will give it, and to your seed forever" (Genesis 13:15). The Verifier records the shared lexemes H2233 zeraʻ ("seed," 205 vv) and H5414 nâthan ("give," the common verb, 1817 vv). Because nâthan is one of the most frequent verbs in the language, this is recorded as a structural/thematic link, not a rare-word quotation — but the thematic identity is exact: the same land, the same seed, the same giving verb, handed down now to the third generation. Barnes counts it "the third announcement of the seed that blesses to the third in the line of descent" (Genesis 12:2–3; 22:18; 26:4).
Genesis 28:13 · Genesis 13:15 · Genesis 22:18
basis: shared Strong's lexemes H2233 zeraʻ (205 vv) and H5414 nâthan (1817 vv) — both frequent, so thematic rather than verbal; the link is the verbatim renewal of the Abrahamic land-grant (Gen 13:15) to the third generation, noted by Barnes.
Verse 14's climax — "in you and in your seed all the families of the ground shall be blessed" — re-speaks the foundational word of Genesis 12:3: "in you all the families of the ground shall be blessed." The Verifier records three shared lexemes: H127 ʼădâmâh ("ground," 211 vv), H4940 mishpâchâh ("families," 224 vv), and H1288 bârak ("bless," 289 vv). The triple overlap of "families-of-the-ground-blessed" is strong, but each word is common enough that the tier is structural/thematic rather than a rare-word quotation. This is the universal hinge of the patriarchal covenant — the clause Paul reads in Galatians 3:8 as "the gospel preached beforehand to Abraham" — now confirmed to Jacob.
Genesis 28:14 · Genesis 12:3
basis: shared Strong's lexemes H127 ʼădâmâh (211 vv), H4940 mishpâchâh (224 vv), H1288 bârak (289 vv) — the three-word formula 'all families of the ground blessed'; frequent words, so structural rather than verbal, but the formula is the same as Gen 12:3.
God's last promise to Jacob carries the verb ʻāzab — "I will not forsake you until I have done what I have spoken" (v.15). The Verifier records the shared lexeme H5800 ʻâzab (with H5973 ʻim and H3808 lōʼ) between this verse and Joshua 1:5, where God tells Joshua, "I will not fail you nor forsake you." Held with deliberate caution. The Pulpit Commentary on this very verse traces the "I will not leave thee" formula through "Israel (Deuteronomy 31:6, 8), Joshua (Genesis 1:5 [sic — Joshua 1:5]), Solomon (1 Chronicles 28:20)… Christians (Hebrews 13:7)." That chain is exactly where provenance gets debated: Hebrews 13:5 quotes "I will never leave you nor forsake you," and commentators dispute whether the writer is citing Joshua 1:5, Deuteronomy 31:6/8, or Genesis 28:15 — the wording does not match any one Hebrew text exactly, and the LXX (Greek New Testament to Hebrew Old Testament) crosses the language barrier where no shared Strong's number can exist. Because the NT quotation's source is genuinely contested, and because this unit's rule requires flagging the Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 link, the badge is set to flagged — verify source.
Genesis 28:15 · Joshua 1:5 · Hebrews 13:5
basis: Gen 28:15 ↔ Joshua 1:5 share H5800 ʻâzab ('forsake') per the Verifier — a real Hebrew↔Hebrew thematic link. But the onward quotation in Hebrews 13:5 ('I will never leave you nor forsake you') has contested provenance — Genesis 28:15 / Deuteronomy 31:6,8 / Joshua 1:5 are all proposed, no exact Hebrew match, and the NT side is Greek (no shared Strong's possible). The Pulpit Commentary's own chain (which even misprints 'Genesis 1:5' for Joshua 1:5) shows the tradition treats these as one formula; flagged because the cited NT source is disputed.
Jacob names the threshold "the gate of heaven" (v.17), using shaʻar, the city-gate of access and authority. The Verifier records the shared lexeme H8179 shaʻar ("gate," 302 vv) with Psalm 118:20, "This is the gate of the LORD; the righteous shall enter through it." The link is structural/thematic — shaʻar is a common word — but the motif is precise: a single named doorway through which one enters the presence of God. Bethel's "gate of heaven" and the psalm's "gate of the LORD" are the same theological image of an appointed, exclusive entrance to the divine dwelling, which the older commentators (and the New Testament's "I am the door," John 10:9) gather toward Christ.
Genesis 28:17 · Psalm 118:20
basis: shared Strong's lexeme H8179 shaʻar (302 vv) — a common word, so thematic rather than verbal; the link is the motif of a single named gate of entrance into God's presence ('gate of heaven' / 'gate of the LORD').
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The most attested christology in Scripture rests on this scene, because Jesus claims it himself. To Nathanael he says, "You shall see heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man" (John 1:51) — taking the very angels-on-the-stairway of Genesis 28:12 and locating their traffic on his own person. Maclaren draws it out: Jesus Christ is the ladder between God and man. On Him all divine gifts descend; by Him all the angels of human devotion, consecration, and aspiration go up. Matthew Henry fixes the two natures to the two ends of the ladder: He is this ladder; the foot on earth in his human nature, the top in heaven in his Divine nature. The Geneva Study Bible, Poole, and Ellicott all read the sullām as Christ "the Way" (John 14:6), the one mediator (1 Timothy 2:5). Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link — Hebrew Old Testament to Greek New Testament — so no shared Strong's number can exist (the Verifier returns no shared lexeme). The connection is not lexical but the Lord's own appropriation of the image; the Pulpit Commentary notes the genuine alternative, that Jacob himself (the "Son of man") may be the type rather than the ladder. Ancient, widely held, argued from John's text — not asserted from the index.
Genesis 28:12 · John 1:51
The promise of verse 14 — "in you and in your seed (zeraʻ) all the families of the ground shall be blessed" — is read by the whole tradition as fulfilled in Christ. Benson: All that are blessed, whatever family they are of, are blessed in Christ. Gill names "that eminent and principal seed… the Messiah." The apostle Paul makes the reading explicit: the blessing-of-the-nations clause is "the gospel preached beforehand to Abraham" (Galatians 3:8), and the singular noun "seed" he reads as one person — "He does not say, 'And to seeds,' as of many, but… 'And to your seed,' who is Christ" (Galatians 3:16). Held honestly: this too crosses from Hebrew to Greek, so no shared Strong's number is possible (the Verifier confirms none for the cross-Testament pair); within the Hebrew, the grammatically singular collective zeraʻ genuinely permits Paul's reading without compelling it. Ancient and widely held, resting on the apostle's own interpretation of the singular.
Genesis 28:13 · Genesis 28:14 · Galatians 3:8
Jacob's twin names for the place (v.17) — bêth Elohim, house of God, and shaʻar haššāmayim, gate of heaven — are read figurally as the church and as Christ. Gill presses the type at length: the place "was an emblem of the church of Christ, who is figured by the ladder set on earth, whose top reached to heaven, the door, the gate, the way of ascent to it." The single appointed door into God's dwelling answers to "I am the door; if anyone enters by me, he will be saved" (John 10:9), and the "house of God" to the temple of his body (John 2:21) and to the church "built… for a dwelling place of God" (Ephesians 2:22). Held as typological, not lexical: this is a figural reading, ancient and widely held among the expositors, drawn from the imagery of dwelling-and-doorway rather than from any shared original-language word — the kind of reading offered to be tested against the plain sense, not imposed on it.
Genesis 28:17 · Psalm 118:20
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
Several seams in this unit are left open on purpose. First, the central noun sullām (v.12) is a true hapax legomenon — it occurs nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible, so the choice between "ladder" (KJV) and "stairway / terraced ascent" (Cambridge, Maclaren) cannot be settled from parallel usage; both are shown. Second, the preposition ʻālāyw (v.13) genuinely means either "above it" (the stairway) or "beside him" (Jacob) — the BSB chooses "at the top," the Cambridge Bible argues "beside him"; the fork is real and kept visible. Third, the verb wəniḇrăḵū (v.14) is a Nifal that can be read passive ("shall be blessed") or reflexive ("shall bless themselves"); the passive is followed here with the ancient and apostolic reading (Galatians 3:8), but the reflexive door the stem leaves open is noted, not erased. On cross-references: every Hebrew↔Hebrew link was checked against the Verifier's index. The rare-word echo to 1 Samuel 26:7 (mᵉraʼăshâh, only 8 vv) is genuinely verbal; the Genesis 12 / 13 / 22 links, the Genesis 32:1 angels-bracket (mălʼâk), and the Psalm 118:20 gate-link are shown as structural, not verbal, because the shared words (nâthan, bârak, shaʻar, ʼădâmâh, mălʼâk) are common. The Christ-links to John 1:51 and Galatians 3:8/16 are marked cross-Testament: they pass from Hebrew to Greek where no shared Strong's number can exist, so they are argued from the New Testament's own appropriation (the Lord's words in John, Paul's reading of the singular zeraʻ), never asserted from the lexicon. Finally — and per this unit's standing rule — the "I will not leave you" thread is flagged — verify source: Genesis 28:15, Deuteronomy 31:6/8, and Joshua 1:5 all share the verb ʻāzab and all are proposed as the source of the quotation in Hebrews 13:5, which matches none of them exactly; the Pulpit Commentary's own list even misprints "Genesis 1:5" for Joshua 1:5, a small witness to how loosely the tradition handles the chain. "Test all things. Hold fast to what is good." (1 Thessalonians 5:21)
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)